Philosopher Alain de Botton has tackled happiness, architecture, work and the news media during his prolific career. In his latest book The Course of Love, he confronts some of society's deeply
30,615 ratings3,007 reviews. Alain de Botton's The Consolations of Philosophy takes the discipline of logic and the mind back to its roots. Drawing inspiration from six of the finest minds in history - Socrates, Epicurus, Seneca, Montaigne, Schopenhauer and Nietzsche - he addresses lack of money, the pain of love, inadequacy, anxiety and
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Dating is a masquerade ball where we conceal our real self behind many masks. Existing at the intersection of psychology and philosophy, the idea-orientation of an essay and the narrative-orientation of a novel, Alain de Botton’s On Love explores this phenomenon with great wit. Though a portrait of a single couple, a nameless narrator and
13/11/2020. Our latest Music Matters feature is with world-renowned philosopher, Alain De Botton. Born in Zurich, Switzerland, Alain started writing at a young age, publishing his first book ‘Essays on Love’ when he was only 23. He’s since gone on to write several books covering subjects as varied as status anxiety, architecture, travel
Alain de Botton is the author of numerous works of fiction and nonfiction, including On Love, How Proust Can Change Your Life, The Consolations of Philosophy, The Art of Travel, and The Course of Love. He lives in London where he founded The School of Life, an organization devoted to fostering emotional health and intelligence.
Alison Lurie in the New York Review of Books, 15 March 2007. Today we expect nonfiction to be either comic or somber: to make us laugh, or to inform us, warn us, or terrify us with accounts of miserable childhoods or natural and political disasters. The idea that prose might be both casual in manner and serious in intent is almost forgotten.
Botton comments on a man who is tortured by the desire to know a woman: “He understands what is hidden from him in the light of what is revealed, and therefore understands nothing.”. Proust called the reading of newspapers “an abominable and sensual act.”. He wrote that the events in newspaper articles “are transformed for us, who don
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